Tomatoville® Gardening Forums

Tomatoville® Gardening Forums (http://www.tomatoville.com/index.php)
-   Crosstalk: Tomatoville Research and Development™ (http://www.tomatoville.com/forumdisplay.php?f=70)
-   -   Multiflora available (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=34658)

greenthumbomaha January 12, 2015 10:32 PM

Multiflora available
 
If there is an interest in this variety for research / breeding, I have approx 10 seeds available of Yellow Centiflor Hypertress, source unknown obtained from local seed library. Please post your request here, and I'll split the pack if needed.

Thought it more appropriate to post here as I don't have enough for a general seed offer this year and it might me missed by the intended audience

- Lisa

ChrisK January 12, 2015 11:29 PM

Definitely interested. Sending PM.

BigVanVader January 13, 2015 07:31 AM

Did someone say multiflora? I'm interested for sure. PM sent.

heirloomtomaguy January 13, 2015 08:55 AM

I am interested pm sent thanks

greenthumbomaha January 13, 2015 09:10 AM

Seeds are spoken for. Myself and one of the recipients will be doing a grow out for general distribution next year.

BigVanVader January 13, 2015 10:44 AM

Cool, cant wait.

Darren Abbey January 16, 2015 02:58 AM

Definitely of interest and willing to wait. Hopefully those doing the grow-out will be able to post some photos here too.

greenthumbomaha January 17, 2015 06:06 AM

Absolutely Darren. I'd love to know more about the taste but can't find any references.

- Lisa

ChrisK January 17, 2015 09:44 AM

I'd be curious to know the actual breeding history of these. I've found only cryptic mentions of it being maybe a three way with wild species. Bred by Al Kapular, I think. He appears to have a number that he calls "centiflor hypertress"

Minnesota Mato January 17, 2015 03:12 PM

I looked into this several years ago. I grew the red centiflor the last two years. The number of flowers is amazing with the fruit set not as high. I am trying to find pictures, but no luck so far. I got my seeds from caseys heirloom tomatoes of airdrie but I just checked the site and they were not selling them this year. I found this link [URL]http://alanbishop.★★★★★★★★★.com/thread/2244[/URL] which might be helpful. I made several crosses and am planting some f2's this year so we will see what happens.

Minnesota Mato January 17, 2015 03:14 PM

not sure why the link didn't work but it is alanbishop.★★★★★★★★★.com/thread/2244

Darren Abbey January 17, 2015 04:51 PM

It looks like the forum indecency filter is set to exclude "p r o b o a r d s" from polite conversation.

maf January 17, 2015 11:58 PM

[QUOTE=Dr Alan Kapuler]over decades we have grown hundreds of Lycopersicon cultivars mostly esculentums, some pimpinellifoliums as well as several other species

then one day in the SSE Lycopersicon humboldtii was offered and since a new, to us, species in a common taxon is always interesting we requested and received some seed, from Rosemarie LaCherez, and grew up some plants with yellow-orange cherry sized fruits in clusters like grapes. Some clusters had 30 fruits.

my daughter Kusra who had learned to hand pollinate peas was interested in doing some crosses in tomatoes and picked out the Grape Tress Tomato as a pollen parent

she crossed it with several different cultivars: Stakeless, Skorospelka, Willamette

then one day we were sitting in the greenhouse where an 8' tall vine of Lycopersicon hirsutum had been living=surviving for several years and with its bright yellow flowers held in umbel-like clusters, we considered crossing it with L. humboldtii but since hirsutum had never given us fertile fruits, we used it as a pollen parent onto the Grape Tress Tomato...
and now several years later we have hypertress lines;Red Centiflor and Yellow Centiflor Tomatoes, both cherry tomatoes

both make tresses of flowers that extend on top of the foliage, have soft, long velvety hairs on the flower buds and have so far up to 150 flowers on an inflorescence

the most fruits on a tress is 89

i'm considering spraying some with GA-3 to reach more fruitful tresses

and in further consideration of the hypertress trait, which also appear in the hypertresses of pea tendrils, in the multiplication of the rows in corn cobs, the polypetalous trait in flowers, linking it to branching patterns, number of flowers per node, and maybe the hox genes in animals with the multiplication of ribs and for all of us the multiplication of certain DNA/RNA sequences, duplications and then sometimes reduplications, as has happened with the genetic material of fungi and other eukaryotes.

Read more: [url]http://alanbishop.★★★★★★★★★.com/thread/2244#ixzz3P96WUIBs[/url]
[/QUOTE]

Minnesota Mato January 18, 2015 01:55 AM

Thankyou, hope that helps

ChrisK January 30, 2015 09:44 PM

So it's [I]L. humboldtii [/I]x [I]L. hirsutum[/I]. He's calling [I]humboldtii [/I]"Grape Tress Tomato"? OK. That gave him his Red Centiflor Hypertress. Orange and Yellow Centiflor Hypertress are derived from a cross between Red Centiflor Hypertress and Sungold F1.

We'll see what they look like in 2015!

Thanks for the info maf.


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:18 PM.


★ Tomatoville® is a registered trademark of Commerce Holdings, LLC ★ All Content ©2022 Commerce Holdings, LLC ★